Impact of Parliament's Absence on the Exercise of Legislative Competence
Keywords:
Absence of Parliament, Legislative Competence, Government Legislation, Constitution.Abstract
In ordinary circumstances, the executive branch shall be competent to implement the laws promulgated by the legislature by issuing implementing regulations within the limits of the law to be implemented without any change, in the absence of legislative authority in certain ordinary cases, such as the period between sessions, the annual recess, the dissolution of the Council, or the country's exposure to exceptional circumstances which cannot be met by ordinary law, because of the urgent need to enact legislation required by the public interest in such circumstances, States tend to give the executive more powers than they normally did the legislative branch may delegate its legislative competence to the executive branch, and the question of adapting the executive branch's actions in the event of a failure to convene Parliament arises whether they are legislative acts or administrative decisions that are open to appeal to the courts.
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